All posts by mevss

Recognitions

In a recent article analysing 20 years of research on Software Product Lines Rick Rabiser is recognized as one of the 15 most prolific researchers in the field. Congratulations! The article was published in the Information and Software Technology Journal. In the same article, the paper “The DOPLER Meta-Tool for Decision-Oriented Variability Modeling: A Multiple … Continue reading Recognitions

Our visitor from HTL Leonding

Florian Redlinger-Pohn, a student from the HTL Leonding, a secondary technical school, just spent two weeks at our lab to work on his thesis describing a tool suite for model-driven software engineering. His work has been supervised by Gerhard Gehrer and Paul Grünbacher.

@PPPJ’15

Abstract: Understanding and tracking down memory-related performance problems, such as long garbage collection times and memory leaks, is a tedious task in large and complex applications. Memory profilers can support developers in this task by recording detailed traces of the application’s memory behavior which can then be analyzed offline. Unfortunately, these traces can become huge, … Continue reading @PPPJ’15

@ASE 2015

We are happy that two papers on research results of our lab will be presented at the 30th IEEE/ACM Int’l Conference on Automated Software Engineering (ASE 2015), which will take place in Lincoln, Nebraska (USA). Configuration-Aware Change Impact Analysis (Authors: Florian Angerer, Andreas Grimmer, Herbert Prähofer, Paul Grünbacher) Understanding variability is essential to allow the … Continue reading @ASE 2015

in: Journal of Systems and Software, 2015

Abstract: Many software-intensive systems today can be characterized as systems of systems (SoS) comprising complex, interrelated, and heterogeneous systems. The behavior of SoS often only emerges at runtime due to complex interactions between the involved systems and their environment. It is thus necessary to determine unexpected behavior by monitoring SoS at runtime, i.e., collecting and … Continue reading in: Journal of Systems and Software, 2015

@SPLC’15 and MODELS’15

We recently got two empirical papers accepted on the notion of features (SPLC’15) and feature modelling (MODELS’15). The work leading to the first paper has been conducted in cooperation with the University of Waterloo, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Fraunhofer IESE, and the University of Toronto. What is a Feature? A Qualitative Study of Features in … Continue reading @SPLC’15 and MODELS’15